Costs & Values in Today’s Dollars

Valuing the shipwrecked steamer United States

What she would have cost today

At the time of her loss, the screw steamer United States was described as valued at about $60,000 and her cargo as worth about $25,000.[1] If those values were figured at the relative price of an ounce of gold ($18.93 per ounce in 1864 and 1881and$1342 per ounce on June 19, 2013), the seventeen years old steamer would have cost about $4,253,565 in today’s dollars, and her cargo, which would have cost just over 1,320 ounces of gold in 1881, would have cost about $1,772,319 today.

Value of her cargo today

The antiquity,[2]provenance and a documented, unique history behind an artifact can greatly increase its value[3]especially from a historic shipwreck, sometimes multiplying its original cost[4] hundreds or even thousands of times.

This page deals with the steamer United States, which was shipwrecked off Cape Romain, South Carolina in 1881 and discovered and identified by underwater archaeologistDr. E. Lee Spence. He also discovered other abandoned wreckage in the same general vicinity. In 2012, the Federal District Court ruled that Spence was the “true and exclusive owner of the abandoned wreckage” (which includes the United States and all of the other shipwrecks that he had found in the specific area designated in his court filing), which means he is already the legal owner of any and all shipwreck gold, silver, cannons, hulls, engines, rigging, and other artifacts on those wrecks. To learn more about shipwrecks in general, check outSpence’s page on Facebook. This is not and should not be considered part of any offering memorandum.

Trademark Notice: Shipwrecks, Shipwrecks.com and Shipwrecks Incorporated are trademarks jointly claimed and owned by Edward Lee Spence; Shipwrecks, Inc.; and Narwhal Press Inc. Except when individually noted, all other trademarks shown in the content of this site are the individual property of their registered owners.